eazy come eazy go

Shannon 2022-03-14 14:12:22

The significance of blow is extraordinary, all gods and horses are floating clouds, no matter how many dreams and pursuits, if there is no solid achievement and the meaning of work, everything will be like the wind blowing, without a trace, leaving only dust. In addition to the illusory number of money, the most precious time is wasted by the drug trade. blow in the wind.

eazy come easy go. The new girlfriends George met who wanted to get something for nothing introduced them to drug dealers. Chance and guts made them rich in an instant. God wants to destroy a person first to make him crazy. Prison is a turning point, like George said, "There are criminal school, when he went in with a Bachelor of Marijuana, when he came out with a doctorate of cocaine."

blood is blood, George wants a different life from his father, and when Cruz yells at him, the familiar A scene rose in his heart. No matter how much he struggled, his father's words were always fulfilled. "Wealth is illusory." A happy life is not based on material abundance. Short-term happiness and satisfaction will eventually disappear like soap bubbles. He was betrayed by his partner, betrayed by his friend, his savings was nationalized, his wife abandoned him, all of which belonged to one F word. When George, who was finally sentenced to 60 years in prison, realized all of this, he could do nothing. The daughter who cherishes and loves the most no longer accepts him. It is said that he has not visited the prison so far, and George can only meet his daughter in his own imagination, and the fantasy is forgiven. Adapted from real events, Uncle Depp's acting is still my favorite. He first collaborated with Cruz, and 10 years later the two reunited in Caribbean 4.

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Extended Reading

Blow quotes

  • Diego Delgado: How much time do you have?

    George: Oh, let's see. Twenty-six months.

    Diego Delgado: Twenty-six months? For murder? I must meet your lawyer.

  • George: [narrating] Danbury wasn't a prison, it was a crime school. I went in with a Bachelor of marijuana, came out with a Doctorate of cocaine, and after sixteen months, I was once again a free man, well not altogether "free." The conditions of my parole were I had to live at my parents and find a job.